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  1. We Must Be Friends: An Analysis and Interpretation of Hannah Arendt’s Concepts of Compassion, Pity, and Solidarity.Kun-Feng Tu - 2025 - Chinese Political Science Review 79:99-133.
    This paper analyses Arendt’s concept of political sentiment, specifically focusing on pity and solidarity. By interpreting Arendt’s text, I reveal that Arendt had an ambiguous understanding of the two concepts. The paper severs to clarify her notion that, although solidarity largely aligns with the sentiment of pity, its nature (by which it partakes of reason) makes it distinct from pity. Ultimately, solidarity is also a principle of action. This paper elaborates on the nature of pity and solidarity, contending that they (...)
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  2. The Will to Freedom: Reconsidering Hannah Arendt’s Concept of Love and the Will and Their Relationship to Freedom.Kun-Feng Tu - 2025 - Taiwanese Journal of Political Science 103:1-40.
    This paper answers two questions: (1) What is the relationship between freedom and the concepts of love and the will? (2) What does this relationship mean for the concept of freedom? By reading and interpreting Hannah Arendt's political thought, this paper argues that, on the one hand, through a self-transformation of the will-or, in Arendt's language, our willing activity-the will can turn into what she called "the spring of action". Our willing activity, Arendt said, must transform itself into activities of (...)
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  3. The Right to Have Rights as the Collective Right of a People ―An Interpretation of Hannah Arendt’s Concept of the Right to Have Rights.Kun-Feng Tu - 2024 - Taiwan Democracy Quarterly 21 (2):1-34.
    This paper interprets Hannah Arendt's concept of the right to have rights (RthRs) as the collective right of a people, arguing that it is a right to build relationships equally and freely with other peoples around the world. The paper first reviews the existing literature on the concept and argue against Seyla Benhabib's reading of it. By reading and interpreting Arendt's text, I contend that the RthRs is (1) the right to politics, (2) the power of a people, which I (...)
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  4. What We Talk about When We Talk about Political Theory: Reconsidering Hannah Arendt’s “Method” of Political Thinking and its Critiques to the Rawlsian Method of Political Philosophy Today.Kun-Feng Tu - 2021 - Taiwan Political Science Review 25 (2):219-263.
    This paper reconsiders Hannah Arendt’s “method” of political thinking and its implicated critiques of the Rawlsian methodology of political philosophy today, namely, the reflective equilibrium. By addressing Arendt’s approach to political thinking and comparing it with John Rawls’ counterpart, I argue that inasmuch as thinking cannot be reduced to philosophising, the outcome of thinking is by no means nothing but philosophy, either. That is to say, in opposition to the analytic method of normative political philosophy ever since Rawls, I contend (...)
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  5. The Limitations of Narrative Community―Investigating Contemporary Theories and Practices of Self-Determination and Hao Yeh’s Arendtian Theory of Narrative Community.Kun-Feng Tu - 2025 - Innovation in the Social Science 2:167-196.
    This article engages with the ongoing debates over Professor Hao Yeh's new book, Shicha Zhengzhi, Zhengzhi Shicha (A Politics of Différance), by discussing the international challenges to his theory of narrative community. From a theoretical perspective, the article argues that political theories of self-determination cannot possibly contribute to the formation of a community's story despite Yeh seemingly endorsing their potential to do so. From an international legal perspective, Yeh seems to fail to explain how his theory of narrative synchronicity can (...)
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    Arendt Studies under the Shadow of China: An Overview of Taiwanese Scholarship of Hannah Arendt.Kun-Feng Tu - 2025 - Hannaharendt Net 14 (2):183-203.
    Situated against the background of Taiwan’s democratic consolidation and the escalating military threats from China, Hannah Arendt political thought has seen a significant surge in scholarly and public interest of the island. This intellectual urgency, amplified by watershed moments such as the 2014 Sunflower Student Movement, has expanded Arendt’s readership beyond academia into the broader civil society. This paper examines the trajectory of this engagement by investigating scholarly research and the history of Arendt’s translation into Mandarin. It categorizes existing Taiwanese (...)
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  7. Academic Charlatans and their Knowledge Production under Authoritarian Regime―An Interdisciplinary Research Proposal between Transitional Justice and Epistemic Injustice.Kun-Feng Tu - 2024 - Soochow Journal of Political Science 4 (1):205-269.
    This paper analyses the relationship between academic researchers and an authoritarian regime through theories of transitional justice and epistemic injustice to explicate how authoritarianism impacts knowledge production and development of a society. By case studies, the paper claims that although both theories could partially explain difficulties of production and spread of knowledge in the authoritarian-ruled society, it seems that each of their explanation taken solely is not adequate to address the problem. After reviewing literatures, the paper finds that (1) transitional (...)
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  8. Structure of Perpetual Peace: On Perpetual Peace in Rousseau, Bentham and Kant's International Political Thought.Kun-Feng Tu - 2017 - Dissertation, National Taiwan University
    This thesis is a study of international perpetual peace. I focus on Rousseau, Bentham and Kant’s international political thought and attempt to present readers with development of an idea “perpetual peace.” I also regard their analysis of causes of war and peace as an inspiration for reform to contemporary international politics. By doing so, I intend to elaborate three points. First, there is a traditional understanding of the idea of perpetual peace. Therefore, it seems necessary to scrutiny and improve Doyle’s (...)
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